Use of position data to determine a group monitor

ABSTRACT

A method for selecting a lighting control group monitor does not require special device network configuration steps during manufacturing. The selected lighting control group monitor is determined based on a location of the lighting control group monitor relative to other lighting system elements within the lighting control group. One lighting system element most centrally located within the lighting control group is selected as the lighting control group monitor. A lighting control group network table listing an entry for each of the lighting system elements is modified such that the entry corresponding to the lighting control group monitor is the first entry in the lighting control group network table. The lighting control group network table is sent to the lighting control group monitor and the lighting control group monitor sends the lighting control group network table to the other lighting system elements in the lighting control group.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/215,831, filed Jul. 21, 2016, the entire contents of which are expressly incorporated herein by reference.

BACKGROUND

Conventional wall switches and light fixtures communicate over wired systems. More recent lighting systems use wireless communications; however, configuring luminaires to operate over wireless communication systems often requires special device network configuration steps during manufacturing.

In addition, wireless communications have limitations related to distance and performance. In a lighting system with a group monitor responsible for controlling operations of the lighting system, such group monitor needs reliable wireless communications with other elements of the lighting system. However, traditional approaches to selecting the group monitor often require manual intervention and prior knowledge regarding positions of elements within the lighting system.

Accordingly, a system is needed to overcome these and other limitations in the art.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The drawing figures depict one or more implementations in accord with the present teachings, by way of example only, not by way of limitation. In the figures, like reference numerals refer to the same or similar elements.

FIG. 1A is a high-level functional block diagram of an example of a system of networks and devices that support light commissioning/maintenance and provide a variety of lighting control, including communications in support of turning lights on/off, dimming, set scene, and sensor trip events.

FIG. 1B is another high-level functional block diagram of an example of a system of networks and devices that further includes plug load controller and power pack devices and various lighting control groups.

FIGS. 1C-1D are high-level functional block diagrams of examples of portions of a system, similar to one of the systems of FIGS. 1A-B, with elements deployed in a linear fashion.

FIG. 2A is a high-level flow chart of an example of a beginning portion of a commissioning protocol procedure for the lighting control system of FIG. 1A or FIG. 1B.

FIG. 2B is a high-level flow chart of an example of an ending portion of the commissioning protocol procedure for the lighting control system of FIG. 1A or 1B.

FIG. 2C is a high-level flow chart of an example of an alternative ending portion of the commissioning protocol procedure for the lighting control system of FIG. 1A or 1B.

FIGS. 3A-C are block diagrams of examples of luminaires that communicate via the lighting control system of FIG. 1A or 1B.

FIGS. 4A-C are block diagrams of examples of wall switches that communicate via the lighting control system of FIG. 1A or 1B.

FIG. 5 is a block diagram of a plug load controller that communicates via the lighting control system of FIG. 1B.

FIG. 6 is a block diagram of a power pack that communicates via the lighting control system of FIG. 1B.

FIG. 7 is a flow chart presenting the states and transitions for the various lighting system elements in the system examples of FIGS. 1A-B.

FIG. 8 is a high-level functional block diagram of a mobile device for commissioning and maintenance of the lighting control system of FIG. 1A or 1B.

FIG. 9A is a wireless advertising packet format for commissioning a lighting system element on a lighting control network via a commissioning network.

FIG. 9B is an exploded view of an advertising channel protocol data unit of the advertising packet of FIG. 9A.

FIG. 9C is an exploded view of a header of the advertising channel protocol data unit of FIG. 9B.

FIG. 9D is an exploded view of a payload of the advertising channel protocol data unit of FIG. 9B.

FIG. 9E is an exploded view of an advertising index of the payload of FIG. 9D

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth by way of examples in order to provide a thorough understanding of the relevant teachings. However, it should be apparent to those skilled in the art that the present teachings may be practiced without such details. In other instances, well known methods, procedures, components, and/or circuitry have been described at a relatively high-level, without detail, in order to avoid unnecessarily obscuring aspects of the present teachings.

Reference now is made in detail to the examples illustrated in the accompanying drawings and discussed below.

FIGS. 1A-B both illustrate functional block diagrams of an example of a system of networks and devices that support light commissioning/maintenance and provide a variety of lighting control, including communications in support of turning lights on/off, dimming, set scene, and sensor trip events. FIG. 1B is the same as FIG. 1A, but 1B further includes additional lighting control devices (LCDs): a plug load controller 30 and a power pack 35; and illustrates exemplary lighting control groups. FIGS. 1C-D also depict lighting elements as might be found in the system of FIGS. 1A-B, however, such devices are deployed in a linear fashion or otherwise distributed throughout a large area. For example, the lighting elements of FIGS. 1C-D may represent street lamps located along a roadway or positioned in a parking area; light fixtures located along a hallway; or light fixtures and/or other lighting elements distributed throughout a relatively large open space (e.g., an auditorium, large warehouse facility, wide open retail location, etc.).

The lighting control system 1 may be designed for indoor commercial spaces. Alternatively, lighting control system 1 may be designed for usage in an outdoor space. As shown, system 1 includes a variety of lighting system elements, such as a set of luminaires 10A-N (lighting fixtures) and a set of wall switches 20A-N. Daylight, occupancy, and audio sensors are embedded in lighting system elements, in this case luminaires 10A-N to enable controls for occupancy and dimming.

Luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35 communicate control over a 900 MHz (sub-GHz) wireless control network 5 and accordingly each include a first radio in the sub-GHz range. A variety of controls are transmitted over wireless control network 5, including, for example, turn lights on/off, dim up/down, set scene (e.g., a predetermined light setting), and sensor trip events. Each luminaire 10A-N, wall switch 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35, is also equipped with a second near range Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) radio that communicates over commissioning network 7 for purposes of commissioning and maintenance of the wireless lighting control system 1, however no controls pass over this commissioning network 7.

Plug load controller 30 plugs into existing AC wall outlets, for example, and allows existing wired lighting devices, such as table lamps or floor lamps that plug into a wall outlet, to operate in the lighting control system 1. The plug load controller 30 instantiates the table lamp or floor lamp by allowing for commissioning and maintenance operations and processes wireless lighting controls in order to the allow the lighting device to operate in the lighting control system 1.

Power pack 35 retrofits with existing wired light fixtures (luminaires). The power pack 35 instantiates the wired light fixture by allowing for commissioning and maintenance operations and processes wireless lighting controls in order to allow the lighting device to operate in the lighting control system 1.

Both plug load controller 30 and power pack 35 can include the same circuitry, hardware, and software as light fixtures 10A-N and wall switches 20A-N.

The system 1 is provisioned with a mobile device 25 that includes a commissioning/maintenance application 22 for commissioning and maintenance functions of the lighting control system 1. For example, mobile device 25 enables mobile commissioning, configuration, and maintenance functions and can be a PDA or smartphone type of device with human interfacing mechanisms sufficient to perform clear and uncluttered user directed operations. Mobile device 25 runs mobile type applications on iOS7, Android KitKat, and windows 10 operating systems and commissioning/maintenance application 22 to support commissioning.

Web enabled (cloud) services for facilitating commissioning and maintenance activities is also provided by mobile device 25. The commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile commissioning device 25 interfaces with the cloud services to acquire installation and configuration information for upload to luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35. The installation and configuration information is received by mobile device 25 from the gateway 55. The gateway 50 engages in communication through the wide area network (WAN) 55.

A gateway 50 and backhaul connection capability may also be provided.

Lighting control system 1 can leverage existing sensor and fixture control capabilities of Acuity Brands Lighting's commercially available nLight® wired product through firmware reuse. In general, Acuity Brands Lighting's nLight® wired product provides the lighting control applications. However, the illustrated lighting control system 1 includes a communications backbone and includes model—transport, network, media access control (MAC)/physical layer (PHY) functions. The sub-GHz communications of the wireless control network 5 features are built on a near 802.15.4 MAC and PHY implantation with network and transport features architected for special purpose control and air time optimizations to limit chatter.

The lighting control system 1 can be deployed in standalone or integrated environments. System 1 can be an integrated deployment, or a deployment of standalone groups with no gateway 50. One or more groups of lighting control system 1 may operate independently of one another with no backhaul connections to other networks.

Lighting control system 1 may comprise a mix and match of various indoor systems, wired lighting systems (nLight® wired), emergency, and outdoor (dark to light) products that are networked together to form a collaborative and unified lighting solution. Additional control devices and lighting fixtures, gateway(s) 50 for backhaul connection, time sync control, data collection and management capabilities, and interoperation with the Acuity Brands Lighting's commercially available SensorView product may also be provided.

As shown in FIG. 1B, control, configuration, and maintenance operations of the lighting control system 1 involve networked collaboration between the luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller(s) 30, and power pack(s) 35 that comprise a lighting control group. An installation is comprised of one or more lighting control groups each operating independently of one another. One or more lighting control groups may exist in the wireless control network 5. Each lighting control group will have a group monitor, and this is shown in FIG. 1B where there a two groups and each group has a monitor.

Groups are formed during commissioning of the lighting control system 1 where all members of the group are connected together over wireless control network 5, which in our example is a sub-GHz subnetwork defined by an RF channel and a lighting control group identifier.

The lighting system elements subscribe to channels and only listen for/react to messages on the RF channel with the identifier (ID) of the subscribed channel that designates the lighting control group that the lighting system element is a member of.

In general, groups do not share RF channels and thus form their own RF subnetwork, however with only 10 available channels some overlap is inevitable. Analysis and simulation have indicated that group distribution and spatial separation will mitigate the congestion and collision side effects that can occur when many lighting system elements 10A-N, 20A-N, 30, 35 share a singular RF enclave.

A group can be further divided to address control to specific control zones within the group defined by a control zone identifier. Zone communications are managed as addressable features at run time. Up to 16 independent zones of control are available for each group and each group can support up to 128 addressable elements (luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, power pack 35).

The wireless control network 5 distributes control messages and events, network management messages and events, health and failover events, and group commissioning and maintenance communications, such as firmware update distributions and group membership changes.

Wireless control network 5 provides a secure control network (Sub-GHz) on which to operate. Devices are manually added to the wireless control network 5 via the commissioning process via commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25. The commissioning process includes authorization and authentication features that allow only trusted and known entities to add confirmed devices 10A-N, 20A-N, 30, 35 to the network. Requirements relating to network modification (device add/delete/modify) are allocated to the mobile device 25 and its interface (commissioning/maintenance application 22) to the lighting control system 1.

Message authentication in the lighting control system 1 is provided by the 802.15.4 compliant MAC layer solution commercially available from Silicon Labs. The solution uses the AES CCM block cypher mode of operation to secure over the air frames. The mode of operation provides NIST compliant authentication, encryption, and integrity assurance to defeat replay attacks as well as device and message spoofing.

Lighting control system 1 also implements an additional layer of authentication by performing checks on the message source and addressing mechanisms to reject messages from unknown sources (i.e. sources that are not authorized members of a lighting control group network). An intrusion detection scheme using the above schemes and that reports such events will be made via the gateway 50.

The sub-GHz MAC/PHY (wireless control network 5) thus provides secure communication features (authentication, data integrity, and encryption assurance) based on the 802.15.4 standard.

The lighting system elements over the wireless control network 5 together may engage in any-to-many communication and can implement a non-mesh wireless network topology. In our example, wireless control network 5 is a star topology network. Although other network schemes may be utilized, a star topology may be the best fit for aligning the required control communications features with the characteristics of sub-GHz wireless radio. At the center of each lighting control group in a star topology wireless control network 5 is a singular group monitor as shown in FIG. 1B. In FIG. 1B, luminaire 10A is the group monitor for lighting control group 1 and luminaire 10B is the group monitor for lighting control group 2. Lighting control group 1 further comprises luminaire 10N, wall switch 20A, and plug load controller 30. Lighting control group 2 further comprises wall switch 20B and power pack 35.

The monitor is responsible for receiving control events from their source (luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35) and ensuring reliable and timely delivery of the event to the other members of the group. The monitor uses a quick best effort multicast mechanism for fast high-probability delivery. The monitor follows up the multicast with a reliable point to point communication to ensure that all destination devices received and acknowledge the event.

Given the nature of wireless communication, particularly related to sub-GHz wireless radio, selection of the group monitor may be a significant factor. It may be easiest to appreciate the issue and an appropriate selection procedure with respect to a linear deployment example, although the selection procedure offers similar advantages in other network topologies. When lighting system elements belonging to a lighting control group are deployed in a linear fashion, such as depicted in FIGS. 1C-D, selection of the group monitor may best be performed based on a location of the various group members. In FIG. 1C, luminaire 10A is selected as the group monitor. However, as can be seen, wireless communication with other group members, particularly those located furthest away from luminaire 10A, may be negatively impacted. More specifically, transmission power is a significant issue in wireless communication. If transmission power is insufficient to send from end to end (e.g., too long a distance or transmission power is lowered to conserve energy or to reduce interference), the system can still operate effectively if all devices have enough power to communicate with a group monitor/controller near the middle of the line. In contrast, when a centrally located group member is selected as the group monitor, such as luminaire 10C in FIG. 1D, wireless communication between the group monitor and other group members is optimized. Therefore, as described in greater detail below, a commissioning process may include selecting a group monitor based on a location of group members.

Commissioning

Commissioning is the process that sets the lighting control configuration and settings that drive the behavior of the lighting control system 1 and the various elements of that system. One or more mobile devices 25 can be used to commission the installation of lighting control system 1. During setup, commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25 provides a secure method for a system installer to configure the lighting system elements for installation commissioning. The lighting system elements include luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35.

General behavioral settings and network addressing information are stored on the mobile device 25 for upload and allocation to the installation's lighting system elements via commissioning/maintenance application 22. The installation information is managed by commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 to ensure correctness and to eliminate common errors such as assignment of duplicate network addresses. Communication between the mobile device 25 for commissioning/maintenance and the lighting system elements is over the commissioning network 7, such as a BLE network. The lighting system elements are initially in an installation state, beaconing their advertisements when the commissioning starts.

Upon connection with the mobile device 25, the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 transitions the lighting system elements to a commissioning state. Further upon connection, the lighting system element authenticates the mobile device 25 and is ready to accept commands over the commissioning network 7. The wall switches 20A-N suppress sleep mode until completion of the commissioning process and transition to operational mode. Wall switches 20A-N will re-enter sleep mode if the commissioning process is interrupted—two elapsed hours with no activity.

An installation is commissioned according to lighting control groups. A group is a collection of LCDs sharing the same space within an installation (e.g. a room or area). Each lighting control group in the installation has a special lighting system element called the group monitor. The group monitor keeps tabs on the overall state and health of the lighting system elements within the group and assists in the communication of lighting control events between group elements. In general, one can visualize the group network topology as a star with the group monitor as the central node and the remainder of the group's lighting system elements at points of the star.

A group is commissioned by first establishing the group's lighting control network 5 and then configuring the group's control behavior. The lighting control network 5 is established over a 802.15.4 based MAC riding on top of a sub-GHz (904 MHz to 926 MHz) PHY. The commissioning network 7, such as a Bluetooth Low Energy MAC/PHY, is used as the point to point connection medium to transfer control network configuration from the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25 to a lighting system element The commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 builds a network table of the group devices while establishing the lighting control network 5. The network table, used by the group monitor in the execution of its responsibilities, is uploaded from the mobile device 25 to the group's lighting system elements via commissioning/maintenance application 22.

Each lighting system element also has a behavioral configuration. The configuration is specified by a group of settings that define control characteristics such as sensor set points, delays, modes, and ranges. The control characteristics also specify independent zones of control within the group. These characteristics and settings are customized as necessary and uploaded from the mobile device 25 to each lighting system element via commissioning/maintenance application 22.

During the commissioning process, line powered lighting system elements are installed, powered, and advertising over BLE. Battery powered lighting system elements, such as wall switches 20A-N, are installed and in sleep mode to conserve power. After the mobile device 25 is setup, an installer opens the commissioning/maintenance application 22 on the mobile device 25 and walks into an area of the installation that is ready to commission as a lighting control group.

Configuring a Group Network

Wall switches 20A-N and luminaires 10A-N are under the command of the mobile device 25 and respond to a sequence of commands to configure a group network. The wall switches 20A-N respond to a blink request by rapidly blinking an LED. The LED pilot light brightness level is set to a maximum. The luminaires 10A-N responds to a blink request by rapidly blinking an LED light pack. At any time, the lighting system element, including luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, plug pack 35, etc., ceases blinking upon command. The device then accepts the sub-GHz short MAC address, group number, group name, group RF channel, and personal area network (PAN) ID from the mobile device 25. The device persists this information in non-volatile memory (NVM). The device ceases blinking.

The lighting system element accepts the settings from the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 and persists the settings in non-volatile memory. Additionally, lighting system elements that are luminaires 10A-N also receive settings for an on-board controller (MCU) and on-board integrated sensors. The lighting system element may also receive a request to execute an RF spectrum scan to determine the group RF channel. If so, the lighting system element executes the scan and returns the results to the mobile device 25 for distribution to the other group devices.

The above sequence of commands issued from the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 are expected to be in order. Commands received out of order are consider to be an intrusion attempt. The lighting system element configures its media access control (MAC) layer device circuitry and its physical layer circuitry for the OSI model (PHY) with the data transferred from the mobile device 25 and remains in commissioning state.

Connecting a Group Network

To connect to the group network, the lighting system elements accept the group address table from the mobile device 25. The group address table identifies all of the lighting system elements in the group. The device persists this information in non-volatile memory. The device uses the lighting control network 5 (e.g., sub-GHz network) to pass the group address table to the other lighting system elements, such as luminaires 10A-N and wall switches 20A-N, in the group. The communication over the lighting control network 5 is reliable-unicast and may involve some message segmenting if the table size exceeds transport protocol data unit (PDU) size.

The lighting system element returns a status to the mobile device 25 indicating success or failures encountered while distributing the table. The lighting system element accepts a command to tune the group RF transmission (TX) power levels and executes the tune according to the discussion below.

The commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 disconnects after issuing the command to tune the group RF TX power levels. The above sequence of commands issued from the mobile device 25 are expected to be in order. As noted previously, commands received out of order are consider to be an intrusion attempt. Upon completion, the lighting system elements in the group transition to an operational state.

Radio Frequency Channel Selection

The group RF channel is determined at commissioning time by a line powered lighting fixture, such as luminaires 10A-N. The commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 requests the A spectrum scan of the available channels (10) seeking the channel with the lowest average noise level measured over a short period of time.

The process is as follows. Mobile device 25 is connected to a luminaire 10A-N via the commission network 7 (e.g., BLE). The mobile device 25 requests a spectrum scan indicating the number of samples/per channel to be produced. The luminaire 10A-N executes a passive scan of the following channels (channel number, center frequency):

-   1 904 MHz -   2 906 MHz -   3 908 MHz -   4 910 MHz -   5 912 MHz -   6 914 MHz -   7 916 MHz -   8 918 MHz -   9 920 MHz -   10 922 MHz -   11 924 MHz -   12 926 MHz

The luminaire 10A-N returns the average energy and peak energy detected for each channel. The commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 determines the optimum RF channel from the average and peak energy samples giving preference (via a weighting factor) to channels 5-8. The commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 commands the lighting system element to configure its MAC/PHY to use the optimum RF channel.

A modified method that replaces the above method with one that uses a discovery and link quality measurement to join the optimum gateway subnetwork may also be used. Whatever the method (gateway 50 or non-gateway), the RF channel selection scheme is timely to meet the user experience requirements for commissioning. Alternatively, this procedure may be decoupled from mobile device 25 so that channel selection can also execute independently by lighting system elements, such as luminaires 10A-N and wall switches 20A-N.

Transmission Power Adjustment

Sub-GHz RF TX power levels may be managed to optimize intra-group communications in a way that limits adverse effects (collisions, retries, corrupt packets, etc.) on adjacent group subnetworks that happen to be sharing the RF channel. The group monitor executes a link test with each lighting system element in the group as follows. The group monitor sends a link test message to the lighting system element. The device returns a link test response to the group monitor indicating the received strength signal indicator (RSSI-1) of the received message in 1. The group monitor receives the response and notes the RSSI of the received message (RSSI-2). If RSSI-1 is less than the minimum RSSI-1s recorded so far, it records the new minimum RSSI.

The group monitor returns a link test response acknowledgment to the device indicating RSSI-2. The device receives the acknowledgement. The device adjusts it RF TX power appropriately if the RSSI-2 does not fall within the desired range. The device returns a link test status (continue) to the group monitor. The device returns a link test status (complete) if the RSSI-2 is within the desired range. The group monitor receives the link test status. The process repeats if the status indicates continue (is within the desired range). Steps 1 through 6 are repeated until all devices in the group have been tested. The transmission (TX) power adjustment can also be invoked for a single group monitor—device link. In this case, all devices in the group do not need to be tested.

Lighting System Element Health

The group monitor periodically checks the health of each lighting system element, such as luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35, in the group. The group monitor runs a round robin check of each group device such that every device receives a request to report health once every hour. In an example, given a group with a maximum number of devices (128), the group monitor will issue a request for health status every ˜28.125 seconds while a group of six will result in a health request every 10 minutes.

Clock drift and frequency of over the air messaging are not expected to cause undesirable side effects or performance hits to the network 5, however health requests are delayed via a back off timer of 10 seconds during bursts of network traffic to allow potential congestions to clear and make way for higher priority control operations.

The group monitor records faults reported by lighting system elements for later retrieval by commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 for commissioning and maintenance.

Communication Failures

Wireless messaging failures are possible and expected, however continuous failures indicate a problem that might be rectified by adjusting the RF properties of the communications link of lighting system elements, such as luminaires 10A-N and wall switches 20A-N. Continuous failures may result if there is a change to the environment that alters RF performance or in cases where a lighting system element is experiencing internal failures.

Attempts to resolve communications failures are managed by the group monitor rather than separately at each lighting system element. Reliable-unicast messaging acknowledgement is the driver for detecting communications failures.

At lighting system elements, a communication failure occurs when the device transmits a reliable-unicast message and fails to receive an acknowledgement within a retry period. Upon detecting such a failure, the lighting system element increments its counters of total failures and attempts. The lighting system element reports the percentage of failures in response to a request for health status from the group monitor. The lighting system element resets its counters after successful report of health status.

At a group monitor, the group monitor associates a four bit counter with each lighting system element in the group for purposes of tracking communication failures. A failure occurs when the group monitor receives no acknowledgement back after transmitting a reliable-unicast message to a group device. The group monitor will increment the counter for that lighting system element whenever a failure occurs. The counter is reset whenever a successful transmission occurs.

If the counter reaches a value of 0×7 for any lighting system element, the group monitor attempts to correct the consistent communication failure by issuing a command to the lighting system element to incrementally increase its RF TX power level.

If the counter reaches a value of 0×E for any lighting system element, the group monitor initiates an RF TX Power adjustment for the link. Counters that reach a max of 0×F remain there and may indicate a dead lighting system element. Power level adjustment trigger may be changed to act on percentage of failures (similar to the device health method below) rather than consecutive failure conditions.

The group monitor 10A issues a command to the lighting system element to incrementally increase its RF TX power level if the device's status indicates transmission failures at or greater than 15%. The group monitor initiates an RF TX Power adjustment for any communications link where the lighting system element's status indicates transmission failures at or greater than 25%.

FIGS. 2A-C depict a commissioning protocol procedure for any of the lighting control systems of FIGS. 1A-B. It should be noted that a later portion of the procedure may be performed either by mobile device 25 or by a lighting system element, such as one of luminaires 10A-N. As such, FIG. 2A depicts the common portion of the procedure while FIG. 2B depicts the later portion as performed by mobile device 25 and FIG. 2C depicts the later portion as performed by a lighting system element. Of note, although the procedure includes selecting, either by mobile device 24 (i.e., FIG. 2B) or by a lighting system element (i.e., FIG. 2C), a lighting control group monitor while mobile device 25 has an established commissioning network connection, this is only for simplicity. Alternatively, lighting control group monitor selection may occur without an established commissioning network connection and, in the case of selection performed by mobile device 25, a commissioning network connection may be re-established with any one of the lighting system elements in order to enable storage of a lighting control group network table in memory of the selected lighting control group monitor.

As shown in FIG. 2A, various lighting system elements (luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35) go through a series of states and transitions, and engage in communications with mobile device 25 during commissioning of the lighting control system. Although luminaire 10 is shown in this example, it should be understood that the commissioning protocol shown applies to all of the other lighting system elements, such as a wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35.

A precondition to the protocol procedure may be the following. Line powered lighting system elements (e.g., luminaires 10A-N) are installed, powered, and advertising over the commissioning network. The commissioning network is a 2 gigahertz or higher radio band in our example. Battery powered lighting system elements (e.g., wall switches 20A-N) are installed and in sleep mode to conserve power. An installer of the lighting control system sets up the mobile device 25, opens the commissioning/maintenance application 22 on the mobile device 25, and walks into an area of the installation that is ready to commission as a lighting control group.

Beginning in block S200, programming in a memory of the luminaire 10, specifically lighting application 327, configures a processor of the luminaire 10 to transmit/send an advertisement packet via the wireless commissioning network communication band to a mobile device. The advertising packet transmitted via the commissioning network includes a preamble, an access address, a protocol data unit (PDU), and a cyclic redundancy check (CRC). The packet data unit (PDU) includes a header and a payload, and the payload includes an advertising address.

When the lighting system element is a battery powered lighting system element, such as a battery powered wall switch device or standalone sensor, the installer of the lighting control system may push a button on the device. In response to pushing of a button on the battery powered device, the wall switch or the like wakes up from a sleep mode and then transmits the advertisement packet via the commissioning network to the mobile device 25. After a predetermined time period, the battery powered device ceases to transmit advertising packets. After ceasing to transmit advertising packets, the battery powered device enters back into a sleep mode.

Moving to block S205, the mobile device 25 receives, from each of a plurality of lighting system elements, an advertisement packet via the commissioning network, including, for example, the advertising packet previously transmitted by luminaire 10. For example, the installer of the lighting control system selects the lighting system element (e.g., wall switch or luminaire 10) that has sent an advertising packet and requests a curtsy (2 on/off light toggle events). The installer elects to add the lighting system element to the lighting control group (instead of skipping the lighting system element).

Hence, in block S210, the mobile device 25 establishes a commissioning network connection with each of the lighting system elements via the commissioning network. Connection encryption is managed by the commissioning network link layer (e.g., Bluetooth). The luminaire 10, for example, authenticates the mobile device 25 and closes the connection if authentication fails.

Establishing the commissioning network connection with each of the lighting system elements can include generating a short media access control (MAC) address that is less than 6 bytes for each of the lighting system elements to communicate over the lighting control network. Network configuration information is then sent by the mobile device 25, which includes the short MAC address, to each of the lighting system elements, via the commissioning network. For example, the short MAC address can be 16 bits instead of a conventional 48 bit MAC address. The network configuration information can further include a lighting control group identifier (e.g., for a lighting control group monitor to multicast to the lighting control group), a radio frequency (RF) channel, a personal area network (PAN) identifier (e.g., to identify a lighting control zone or lighting control group), and a transmission (Tx) power level. As explained earlier, the lighting control network is a sub-gigahertz radio band.

When establishing the commissioning network connection with each of the lighting system elements, the mobile device 25 interrogates each of the lighting system elements for manufacturing information, sets a lighting system element name for each of the lighting system elements, saves the lighting system element name and the interrogated manufacturing information, and then positions each of the lighting system elements on an installation floor plan screen of the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25. The installer can further refine the position of the lighting system element on the installation floor plan screen of commissioning/maintenance application 22.

Continuing now to block S215, during or after the commissioning network connection is established between the mobile device 25 and luminaire 10, the mobile device 25 checks if the luminaire 10 is the first lighting system element to be commissioned in the lighting control group. If the luminaire 10 is the first lighting system element to be commissioned in the lighting control group, mobile device 25 initiates radio frequency (RF) channel discovery. In step S220, mobile device 25 sends an RF channel discovery command to luminaire 10, which is the first lighting system element configured by the mobile device 25 of the group's lighting system elements via the commissioning network.

Moving now to block S225, during or after establishing the commissioning network connection with the mobile device via the commissioning network, luminaire 10 receives the command for RF channel discovery from the mobile device 25 to determine a radio frequency (RF) channel for the lighting control group. As the first lighting system element of the group to be configured, the luminaire 10 detects/determines the RF channel for the lighting control network and the RF channel is returned to the mobile device 25. For example, after initiation by command from the mobile device 25, luminaire 10 responds by scanning each available RF channel (1-12), measuring energy (noise) on each channel, and selecting the available channel with lowest detected/measured energy (noise) level. Of note, to conserve battery power, the mobile device 25 may never command a battery powered device, such as a wall switch, to determine the group RF channel.

In response to sending the RF channel discovery command to the first lighting system element (e.g., luminaire 10), mobile device 25 receives an assigned RF channel for the lighting control group from luminaire 10 in return. Of note, if the first lighting system element has already determined the RF channel for the lighting control group, then that group RF channel is sent with the network configuration information when subsequent lighting system elements join the group, for example, when a commissioning network connection is established with mobile device 25 (block S210). Hence, mobile device 25 transmits the assigned RF channel to a remainder of the lighting system elements as part of the network configuration information.

In block S228, mobile device 25 optionally derives a location for luminaire 10. For example, a global positioning system GPS location (e.g., latitude and longitude coordinates) of mobile device 25 is determined and associated with luminaire 10. Alternatively, the location may be derived relative to the luminaire's position within the installation floor plan (e.g., an x, y coordinate). Once the location for luminaire 10 is derived, the derived location is, for example, included in a entry corresponding to luminaire 10 within a lighting control group network table, as described in greater detail below.

In block S230, the mobile device 25 builds a lighting control group network table listing an entry for each of the lighting system elements to establish a lighting control group that communicates over a lighting control network. The lighting control group network table is populated with an entry for each of the lighting system elements, for example, an entry is added to the table in the order that a lighting system element is added to the group (e.g., configured by the mobile device 25). Each lighting system element entry in the lighting control group network table includes, for example, interrogated manufacturer information transmitted from the lighting system element (e.g., 16 bit or original 48 bit MAC address(es)) and the previously set lighting system element name. Each lighting system element entry in the lighting control group network table further includes, for example, network configuration information previously transmitted to the respective lighting system element (e.g., short MAC address, lighting control group identifier, RF channel, PAN identifier, and Tx power level). To reduce the size of the table and avoid duplication across entries, certain network configuration information fields, such as RF channel, PAN identifier, and Tx power level, can be stored as attributes of the lighting control group network table.

As mentioned earlier, the later portion of the commissioning procedure includes steps that may be performed either by mobile device 25 or a lighting system element. An installer, for example, may prefer that mobile device 25 performs those steps and such preference may be indicated by the installer. Alternatively, or in addition, whether those steps are performed by mobile device 25 or a lighting system element may be determined based on capabilities available in either mobile device 25 or a lighting system element (e.g., if mobile device 25 is unable to perform those steps, a lighting system element may be relied upon). In a further example, a default preference (e.g., performance by mobile device 25) may be established. FIG. 2B depicts the later portion of the commissioning procedure with those steps performed by mobile device 25 and FIG. 2C depicts the later portion of the commissioning procedure with those steps performed by a lighting system element.

Turning to FIG. 2B and moving to block S235, the mobile device 25 determines whether the last lighting system element has been configured in the group and there are no additional lighting system elements to add to the group. If there are no more lighting system elements to add to the lighting control group, then the mobile device 25 adjusts the lighting control group network table.

In block S236, mobile device 25 selects a lighting control group monitor and in block S238, mobile device 25 modifies the lighting control group network table to reflect the selected lighting control group monitor. For example, once the last lighting system element has been added to the lighting control group, mobile device 25 reorders the entry of the last lighting system element configured by the mobile device via the commissioning network such that entry of the last lighting system element is moved from a last entry to a first entry in the lighting control group network table. Since the first entry of the lighting control group network table is designated as the lighting control group monitor, this means the last device configured by or added by mobile device 25 to the lighting control group is the lighting control group monitor. In the event of failure of the lighting control group monitor, the device that is the second entry becomes the lighting control group monitor; in the event of failure of the second entry, then the lighting system element that is the third entry becomes the lighting control group monitor; etc.

Of note, the above selection approach results in the last commissioned element being selected as the group monitor, which may not be an optimal selection. Alternatively, mobile device 25 selects the lighting control group monitor based on a location of each lighting control group member. For example, mobile device 25 utilizes a center of mass calculation to determine which lighting control group member is most centrally located and the most centrally located group member is selected as the group monitor. Such selection is based, for example, on locations determined from the locations derived in block S228. In a similar fashion, an initial backup group monitor may also be selected based on the various locations. Once the group monitor is selected, an entry corresponding to the selected group monitor is placed as the first entry in the lighting control group network table as part of block S238. If a backup group monitor is also selected, an entry corresponding to the selected backup group monitor is placed as the second entry in the lighting control group network table. In this way, the selected group monitor will be optimally located within the lighting control group.

Proceeding now to block S240, the mobile device 25 sends/transmits (e.g., uploads) the lighting control group network table to the lighting control group monitor of the lighting system elements in the group to establish the lighting control group. In block S240, mobile device 25 continues to maintain an established commissioning network connection with the last commissioned luminaire. As such, if the last commissioned luminaire is selected as the lighting control group monitor, mobile device 25 sends/transmits the lighting control group network table directly to the lighting control group monitor via the established commissioning network connection. Otherwise, mobile device 25 sends/transmits the lighting control group network table indirectly to the lighting control group monitor. That is, mobile device 25 sends/transmits the lighting control group network table to the last commissioned luminaire via the established commissioning network connection and the last commissioned luminaire, in turn, sends/transmits the lighting control group network table to the lighting control group monitor via the lighting control network.

Continuing now to block S245, the lighting control group monitor, for example, luminaire 10, receives the lighting control group network table from mobile device 25 either directly via the commissioning network communication band or indirectly via the lighting control network communication band. The received lighting control group network table lists an entry for each of the lighting system elements in the lighting control group to establish the lighting control group that communicates over the lighting control network. The lighting control group includes, for example, luminaire 10 as the first lighting system element. In response to receiving the lighting control group network table listing the entry for each of the lighting system elements to establish the lighting control group that communicates over the lighting control network communication band, luminaire 10 transmits the received lighting control group network table to all remaining lighting system elements in the lighting control group (e.g., a remainder) via the lighting control network communication band. Alternatively, if the lighting control group monitor receives the lighting control group network table indirectly via the lighting control network communication band (e.g., the lighting control group monitor is not the last commissioned luminaire), the lighting control group monitor may refrain from transmitting the received lighting control group network table and the last commissioned luminaire, having received the lighting control group network table from mobile device 25, may instead transmit the lighting control group network table to all remaining lighting system elements in the lighting control group.

In block S250, after receiving the lighting control group network table, the commissioning network connection between the lighting system element and the mobile device 25 is terminated. Either mobile device 25 or the lighting system element, such as luminaire 10, may issue a command to terminate the commissioning network connection.

Of note, in the example of FIG. 2B, selection of the lighting control group monitor, creation of the lighting control group network table and distribution of the lighting control group network table (i.e., blocks S236-S245) occur while the established commissioning network connection is maintained between mobile device 25 and the last luminaire to be commissioned. In an alternate example, the established commissioning network connection may first be terminated (i.e., block S250) and then blocks S236-S245 may be performed. In this alternate example, a commissioning network connection would be re-established with any one of the lighting system elements as part of block S246.

The lighting system element then updates its commissioning network scan response information and returns to commissioning network (e.g., Bluetooth) advertising mode. The lighting system element also powers up and configures its lighting control network transceiver (e.g., sub-GHz MAC/PHY). The installer repeats the process of FIG. 2 via the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 until all devices in a lighting control group have been configured. The lighting control group network table has an entry for each lighting system element in the group.

Subsequently (e.g., as a post-condition), the lighting system elements of the lighting control group are capable of receiving communication over the lighting control network (e.g., the sub-GHz network). Battery powered lighting system elements, such as a wall switch, may automatically terminate/disconnect the commissioning network connection with the mobile device 25 after a predetermined time period. Such battery powered lighting system elements return to sleep mode after disconnecting/terminating the commissioning network connection and receiving the lighting control group network table.

After termination of the commissioning network connection between the lighting system element and the mobile device 25 via the commissioning network communication band, the lighting system element may continue to transmit advertisement packets via the commissioning network to the mobile device 25. For example, line powered lighting system elements return to advertising over the commissioning network (e.g., Bluetooth) and battery powered lighting system elements return to sleep mode to conserve power.

Finishing now in block S255, lighting control group behavior is defined/set. Such behavior can be set after the lighting control group network table has been transmitted (e.g., uploaded) to the lighting control group monitor. For example, lighting control group behavior is set after the lighting control group has been established. Alternatively, such behavior may be defined while the lighting control group is being established.

The portion of the commissioning process depicted in FIG. 2B involves selection of the lighting control group monitor by mobile device 25. Alternatively, lighting control group monitor selection may be performed by luminaire 10, as depicted in FIG. 2C. More specifically, blocks S242 and S244 of FIG. 2C replace blocks S236 and S238 of FIG. 2B. In block S242, luminaire 10 selects a lighting control group monitor and, in block S244, luminaire 10 modifies the lighting control group network table to reflect the group monitor selection. As with mobile device 25, luminaire 10 may utilize a center of mass calculation or otherwise determine a group member as being the most centrally located and select that centrally located group member as the group monitor.

The installer uses the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25 to define the lighting control group control behavior. The behavior is captured as specific element settings and as attributes of the lighting control group network table that define/configure lighting control group behavior. For example, a configuration is specified by a group of settings or attributes that define control characteristics, such as sensor set point(s), light time delay(s), modes of operation for the lights, and ranges (e.g., light brightness levels). The control characteristics also specify independent zones of control within the lighting control group.

The commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25 then reconnects with a line powered lighting system element (e.g., luminaire 10) in the lighting control group via the commissioning network. The installer transmits/sends the settings (e.g., the lighting control group network table that includes group attributes) to the line powered lighting system element.

The line powered lighting system element receives the settings from the mobile device 25 and routes the settings to destination lighting system elements via the lighting control network (e.g., sub-GHz network). The line powered lighting system element stores the settings when received. The connection between mobile device 25 and the line powered lighting system element via the commissioning network terminates after the line powered lighting system element receives the settings (e.g., a revised lighting control group network table with the group attributes). The lighting system element runs an integrity on the revised lighting control group network table; and upon passing of the integrity check, saves the revised lighting control group network table. The line powered lighting system element then resets or restarts the in order to operate in accordance with the revised lighting control group network table.

In an example, the first line powered lighting system element (e.g., luminaire 10) that receives the lighting control group network table with the group attributes transmits/sends (e.g., forwards) the revised lighting control group network table to the other line powered lighting system elements in the group. Each lighting system element saves the network table, runs an integrity check, and resets/restarts to operate in accordance with the defined group behavior. Upon resetting/restarting, each lighting system element turns off its lighting control network (e.g., sub-GHz) radio, except for the group monitor (to avoid missing messages that are sent from the group).

Extensions to the above steps for battery powered elements (wall switches) are as follows. The installer walks over to a battery powered lighting system element in the installation and wakes up the device, for example, by pushing a button. As a result, the mobile device 25 receives an advertising packet from the battery powered lighting system element and establishes a commissioning network connection with the device. Settings are pushed from the mobile device 25 to the battery powered lighting system element as described above. For example, the lighting control group network table with group attributes is pushed from the mobile device 25 to the battery powered lighting system element. The mobile device 25 disconnects from the battery powered lighting system element. The battery powered lighting system element turns off its commissioning network radio and returns to sleep mode. The installer repeats these steps until all battery powered lighting system elements in the group are configured with the lighting control group network table with the group attributes. Subsequently (e.g., as a post-condition), the lighting control group is operational and operates in accordance with the defined group behavior.

FIGS. 3A-C are block diagrams of a luminaire 10 that communicate via the lighting control system of FIGS. 1A-B. Luminaire 10 is an integrated light fixture that generally includes a power supply 305 driven by a power source 300. Power supply 305 receives power from the power source 300, such as an AC mains, battery, solar panel, or any other AC or DC source. Power supply 305 may include a magnetic transformer, electronic transformer, switching converter, rectifier, or any other similar type of circuit to convert an input power signal into a power signal suitable for luminaire 10.

Luminaire 10 furthers include an intelligent LED driver circuit 310, sensor/control module 315, and a light emitting diode (LED) light source 320. Intelligent LED driver circuit 310 is coupled to LED light source 320 and drives that LED light source 320 by regulating the power to LED light source 320 by providing a constant quantity or power to LED light source 320 as its electrical properties change with temperature, for example. The intelligent LED driver circuit 310 includes a driver circuit that provides power to LED light source 320 and a pilot LED 317. The pilot LED 317 may be included as part of the sensor/control module 315. Intelligent LED driver circuit 310 may be a constant-voltage driver, constant-current driver, or AC LED driver type circuit that provides dimming through a pulse width modulation circuit and may have many channels for separate control of different LEDs or LED arrays. An example of a commercially available intelligent LED driver circuit 310 is manufactured by EldoLED.

LED driver circuit 310 can further include an AC or DC current source or voltage source, a regulator, an amplifier (such as a linear amplifier or switching amplifier), a buck, boost, or buck/boost converter, or any other similar type of circuit or component. LED driver circuit 310 outputs a variable voltage or current to the LED light source 320 that may include a DC offset, such that its average value is nonzero, and/or a AC voltage. The pilot LED 317 indicates the state of the luminaire 10, for example, during the commissioning and maintenance process.

For purposes of communication and control, luminaire 10 is treated as single addressable device that can be configured to operate as a member of one or more lighting control groups or zones. The luminaire 10 is line powered and remains operational as long as power is available.

Sensor/control module 315 includes power distribution circuitry 325, a micro-control unit (MCU) 330, drive/sense circuitry 335, and detector(s) 365. As shown, MCU 330 is coupled to LED driver circuit 310 and controls the light source operation of the LED light source 320. MCU 330 includes a memory 322 (volatile and non-volatile) and a central processing unit (CPU) 323. The memory 322 includes a lighting application 327 (which can be firmware) for both lighting control operations and commissioning, maintenance, and diagnostic operations. The power distribution circuitry 325 distributes power and ground voltages to the MCU 330, drive/sense circuitry 335, wireless transceivers 345 and 350, and detector(s) 365 to provide reliable operation of the various circuitry on the sensor/control module 315 chip.

Luminaire 10 also includes a dual-band wireless radio communication interface system configured for two way wireless communication. In our example, luminaire 10 has a radio set that includes radio 345 for sub-GHz communications and another radio 350 for Bluetooth RF communications. A first transceiver 345, such as a 900 MHz wireless transceiver, issues control operations on the lighting control network. This first transceiver 345 is for any-to-many communication, over a first of the two different wireless communication bands, of control and systems operations information, during luminaire operation and during control network operation over the first wireless communication band.

A second transceiver 350, such as a 2.4 GHz BLE (Bluetooth) wireless transceiver carries out commissioning, maintenance, and diagnostics of the lighting control network. This second transceiver 350 is for point-to-point communication, over a second of the two different wireless communication bands, of information other than the control and systems operations information, concurrently with at least some communications over the first wireless communication band.

As shown, the MCU 330 includes programming in the memory 322 which configures the CPU (processor) 323 to control operations of the respective luminaire 10, including the communications over the two different wireless communication bands via the dual-band wireless radio communication interface system 345, 350. The programming in the memory 322 includes a real-time operating system (RTOS) and further includes a lighting application 327 which is firmware/software that engages in communications with the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 over the commissioning network 7 of FIGS. 1A-B. The lighting application 327 programming in the memory 322 carries out lighting control operations over the lighting control network 5 of FIGS. 1A-B. The RTOS supports multiple concurrent processing threads for different simultaneous control or communication operations of the luminaire 10.

Three different CPU and memory architectures are shown for the sensor/control module 315 and the MCU 330 of the luminaire 10 in FIGS. 3A-C. In FIG. 3A, in addition to the memory 322 and the CPU 323 of the MCU 330 itself, the first transceiver 345 and the second transceiver 350 each include a separate memory (not shown) and a processor (not shown). Hence, in the example of FIG. 3A, the sensor/control module 15 includes a total of three processors and three sets of memory.

In FIG. 3B, the MCU 330 itself does not include a separate memory 322 and a CPU 323. Instead, only the first transceiver 345 and the second transceiver 350 each include a separate memory 322 and a processor 323. For efficiency purposes, such as to save manufacturing costs and conserve power (e.g., line power or battery power), the memory 322 and CPU 323 of the first transceiver 345 is selected to perform processing because the majority of processing (normal lighting control operations) occur over the sub-GHz wireless control network 5. Hence, in the example of FIG. 3B, the sensor/control module 315 includes a total of two processors and two sets of memory.

In FIG. 3C, the MCU 330 comprises a dual band system on chip (SOC) 345, 350 and the MCU 330 itself does not include a separate memory 322 and a CPU 323. Instead, the first transceiver 345 and the second transceiver 350 are integrated and combined into the chipset of the MCU 330. Hence, in the example of FIG. 3C, the sensor/control module 315 includes a total of one processor and one set of memory. Integrating the first transceiver 345 and second transceiver 350 into a dual band SOC chipset of the MCU 330, saves manufacturing costs and conserves power (e.g., line power or battery power).

As shown, luminaire 10 includes detector(s) 365, such as an in-fixture daylight sensor, an occupancy sensor, an audio sensor, a temperature sensor, or other environmental sensor. Detector(s) 365 may be based on Acuity Brands Lighting's commercially available xPoint® Wireless ES7 product. Drive/sense circuitry 335, such as application firmware, drives the in-fixture occupancy, audio, and photo sensor hardware. Outlined below are lighting controls and communications in the lighting control network that occur when drive/sense circuitry 335 of luminaire 10 detects state changes in the detector(s) 365, such as occupancy, daylight, and audio sensors.

Sensor State Change

When an occupancy sensor, daylight sensor, or audio sensor state change occurs is detected by drive/sense circuitry 335, MCU 330 of the luminaire 10 generates a global broadcast packet and a wireless message is created with the global broadcast packet as the payload. The message is sent to the group monitor via the transceiver radio 345 as reliable unicast (unless luminaire 10 is hosting the group monitor) by the lighting application 327 running on MCU.

If a gateway 50 (shown in FIGS. 1A-B) is present, a wireless gateway notification is created indicating the sensor, the sensor state (occupied or unoccupied, inhibiting or not inhibiting), the group, and the zone. The message is then unicast to the gateway 50 by the lighting application 327 running on MCU 330.

If the luminaire 10 misses acknowledgement of the wireless message indicating the sensor state change that luminaire 10 unicasted to group monitor within a predetermined time period, for example, then the luminaire 10 generates and issues/transmits a group multicast message indicating the sensor state change. No check message follow up is issued from the luminaire 10 following this multicast message, but such communication faults and anomalies are tallied by the luminaire 10 for health status reporting as described with reference to FIGS. 1A-B.

Group Monitor

The group monitor acknowledges receipt of the message (MAC layer) from the luminaire 10 indicating the sensor state change. The group monitor extracts the global broadcast packet from the message and creates a multicast message in response using the global broadcast packet as the payload indicating or specifying a lighting control event (e.g., turn on/off or dim a light source) and specifying a lighting control group, for example, using a lighting control group identifier. The global broadcast packet is temporarily saved. The group monitor transmits the multicast message at least three times, for example. The group monitor sends the global broadcast packet to the applications that share the processor with the group monitor. The group monitor interrogates the global broadcast packet to determine the type of control and the zone.

If a gateway 50 (see FIG. 1A) is present and the type of control is occupancy, daylight, or audio sensor related or the zone to make the adjustment to is global, a gateway notification is created indicating the sensor, its state (occupied or unoccupied, inhibiting or not inhibiting), the group, and the zone. The message is then reliably unicast to the gateway 50.

After interrogating the global broadcast to determine the type of control and zone, the group monitor uses the group table to look up the set of lighting system elements that are members of the zone. The group monitor forms a check message using the saved global broadcast as the payload. The group monitor sends the message reliable unicast to each device in the zone as a check to confirm the receipt of the multicast. This confirmation check is not made with the luminaire 10 that has the sensor that actually initiated the global broadcast event.

The group monitor service accommodates concurrent multiple occupancy, daylighting, or audio events irrespective of zone. The group monitor service cancels a confirmation check if it receives a state that obsolesces an active state in progress. In this case, the group monitor service starts a new confirmation check based on the latest state.

If the group monitor misses the unicast message from the luminaire 10 but gets the multicast issued by the luminaire 10—the group monitor executes the gateway and zone check described above.

Recipient Lighting System Elements

Upon receipt of a multicast message from the group monitor at a recipient lighting system element (e.g., luminaire, wall switch, plug load controller, or power pack) that was sent in response to the original message from luminaire 10, the recipient device checks the group indication and the counter. The message is discarded if the lighting system element is not a member of the identified lighting control group specified in the message. The message is also discarded if it is a duplicate (multicast switch state change events are transmitted at least three times, for example, by the group monitor).

The global broadcast payload is extracted from the multicast message and processed by the lighting application 327 running on the MCU 330. Upon receipt of the confirmation check, the message is acknowledged (MAC). The recipient lighting system element determines if it has already acted on the event. If not then the global broadcast payload is extracted from the unicast message and processed by the lighting application 327 running on the MCU 330. Applications are responsible for either processing the global broadcast or discarding it as out of zone scope.

For example, upon receipt of the multicast message from the lighting control group monitor at a respective recipient lighting system element, the respective recipient lighting system element checks a lighting control group identifier to determine whether the respective recipient control device is a member of the identified lighting control group in the message. The recipient lighting system element then determines whether the recipient lighting system element has already acted on a lighting control event (e.g., turn on/off or dim a light source) for lighting control network operation that is similar or identical to the event in the multicast message. If the recipient lighting system element has not already acted in accordance with the control event for lighting control operation, the recipient lighting system element adjusts one of its own LED light source(s) in accordance with the control event. Alternatively, if the recipient lighting system element has already acted on the lighting control event specified in the multicast message, no further action is taken in response by discarding the multicast message.

In an example, the scope of daylight light sensor control is that of the hosting luminaire 10 itself. Therefore events of this type may only be processed locally and not distributed over the lighting control network 5.

FIGS. 4A-C are block diagrams of a wall switch 20 that communicate via the lighting control system of FIGS. 1A-B. The circuitry, hardware, and software of wall switch 20 shown is similar to the luminaire 10 of FIG. 3. However, wall switch 20 is a controller that can be a battery powered device.

Wall switch 20 is similar to luminaire 10 in that they are singularly addressable devices that can be configured to operate as a member of one or more lighting control groups or zones. As shown, wall switch 20 includes a power supply 405, such as a battery or line power, to power itself. Wall switch 10 furthers include an LED driver circuit 410, and a light emitting diode(s) (LED) 420. LED driver circuit 410 is coupled to LED(s) 420 and drives that LED(s) 420 by regulating the power to LED(s) 420 by providing a constant quantity or power to LED light source 420 as its electrical properties change with temperature, for example. The LED driver circuit 410 includes a driver circuit that provides power to LED(s) 420 and a pilot LED 417. LED driver circuit 410 may be a constant-voltage driver, constant-current driver, or AC LED driver type circuit that provides dimming through a pulse width modulation circuit and may have many channels for separate control of different LEDs or LED arrays. An example of a commercially available intelligent LED driver circuit 410 is manufactured by EldoLED.

LED driver circuit 410 can further include an AC or DC current source or voltage source, a regulator, an amplifier (such as a linear amplifier or switching amplifier), a buck, boost, or buck/boost converter, or any other similar type of circuit or component. LED driver circuit 410 outputs a variable voltage or current to the LED light source 420 that may include a DC offset, such that its average value is nonzero, and/or a AC voltage. The pilot LED 417 indicates the state of the wall switch 20, for example, during the commissioning and maintenance process.

As shown, an MCU 430 is coupled to LED driver circuit 410 and controls the light source operation of the LED(s) 420. MCU 430 includes a memory 422 (volatile and non-volatile) and a central processing unit (CPU) 423. The memory 422 includes a lighting application 427 (which can be firmware) for both lighting control operations and commissioning/maintenance operations. The power distribution circuitry 425 distributes power and ground voltages to the LED driver circuit 410, MCU 430, drive/sense circuitry 435, wireless transceivers 445 and 450, and switches 465 to provide reliable operation of the various circuitry on the wall switch 20.

Wall switch 20 also includes a dual-band wireless radio communication interface system configured for two way wireless communication. In our example, wall switch 12 has a radio set that includes radio 445 for sub-GHz communications and another radio 450 for Bluetooth RF communication. A first transceiver 445, such as a 900 MHz wireless transceiver, issues control operations on the lighting control network. This first transceiver 445 is for any-to-many communication, over a first of the two different wireless communication bands, of control and systems operations information, during luminaire operation and during control network operation over the first wireless communication band.

A second transceiver 450, such as a 2.4 GHz BLE (Bluetooth) wireless transceiver carries out commissioning and maintenance of the lighting control network. This second transceiver 450 is for point-to-point communication, over a second of the two different wireless communication bands, of information other than the control and systems operations information, concurrently with at least some communications over the first wireless communication band.

As shown, the MCU 430 includes programming in the memory 422 which configures the CPU (processor) 423 to control operations of the respective wall switch 20, including the communications over the two different wireless communication bands via the dual-band wireless radio communication interface system 445, 450. The programming in the memory 422 includes a real-time operating system (RTOS) and further includes a lighting application 427 which is firmware/software that engages in communications with the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 over the commissioning network 7 of FIGS. 1A-B. The lighting application 427 programming in the memory 422 carries out lighting control operations over the lighting control network 5 of FIGS. 1A-B. The RTOS supports multiple concurrent processing threads for different simultaneous control or communication operations of the wall switch 20.

Three different CPU and memory architectures are shown for the MCU 430 of the wall switch 20 in FIGS. 4A-C. In FIG. 4A, in addition to the memory 422 and the CPU 423 of the MCU 430 itself, the first transceiver 445 and the second transceiver 450 each include a separate memory (not shown) and a processor (not shown). Hence, in the example of FIG. 4A, the MCU 430, first transceiver 445, and second transceiver 450 combine to include a total of three processors and three sets of memory.

In FIG. 4B, the MCU 430 itself does not include a separate memory 422 and a CPU 423. Instead, only the first transceiver 445 and the second transceiver 450 each include a separate memory 422 and a processor 423. For efficiency purposes, such as to save manufacturing costs and conserve power (e.g., line power or battery power), the memory 422 and CPU 423 of the first transceiver 445 is selected to perform processing because the majority of processing (normal lighting control operations) occur over the sub-GHz wireless control network 5. Hence, in the example of FIG. 4B, the sensor/control module 415 includes a total of two processors and two sets of memory.

In FIG. 4C, the MCU 430 comprises a dual band system on chip (SOC) 445, 450 and the MCU 430 itself does not include a separate memory 422 and a CPU 423. Instead, the first transceiver 445 and the second transceiver 450 are integrated and combined into the chipset of the MCU 430. Hence, in the example of FIG. 4C, the MCU 430 includes a total of one processor and one set of memory. Integrating the first transceiver 445 and second transceiver 450 into a dual band SOC chipset of the MCU 330, saves manufacturing costs and conserves power (e.g., line power or battery power).

As shown, wall switch 20 includes switches 465, such as a dimmer switch, set scene switch. Switches 465 can be or include sensors, such as infrared sensors for occupancy or motion detection, an in-fixture daylight sensor, an audio sensor, a temperature sensor, or other environmental sensor. Switches 465 may be based on Acuity Brands Lighting's commercially available xPoint® Wireless ES7 product. Drive/sense circuitry 435, such as application firmware, drives the occupancy, audio, and photo sensor hardware.

In our example, wall switch 20 includes a single shared button switch 465 for on/off functions that requires knowledge of state to differentiate between on and off. The wireless control network 5 communicates output device (luminaire 10, plug load controller 30, power pack 35) state to the wall switches 20 as a means of providing the differentiating state. However, the wireless control network 5 suppresses the communication of output devices to constrain network traffic. Therefore control network 5 will rely on the default mechanism (tracked on the device) for determining on/off on all of the types of wall switch. It is therefore possible for the wall switch 20 to occasionally be out of sync with the actual state of the zone particularly at installation commissioning time. Toggling the switch button 465 one or more times will clear any mismatched state. In our example, wireless control network 5 does not communicate load state via the pilot LED 417 of wall switch 20) 20; however, in other examples wireless control network 5 communicates load state via the pilot LED 417 of wall switch 20.

Outlined below are lighting controls and communications in the lighting control network that occur when drive/sense circuitry 435 detects state changes in the switches 365 of wall switch 20.

Wall Switch Button Pushed

When the on switch 465 is pushed, the lighting application 427 running on MCU 430 generates a global broadcast packet indicating the control event. A wireless message is created with the global broadcast packet as the payload. The message is sent to the group monitor as reliable unicast. If a gateway 50 (see FIG. 1A) is present and if the global broadcast is a switch on/off control, then a gateway notification is created indicating the wall switch 20, the state of the wall switch 20, the group, and the zone. The message is unicasted to the gateway 50.

If the wall switch 20 is a battery powered (sleepy) type wall switch which uses a sleep feature as a means of power conservation and thus requires a special mechanism to acquire certain communications upon wake up, the following extension is used. The wall switch 20 detects the button push and turns on the transceiver radio 445 and transmits the wireless message with the global broadcast packet as the payload. Next, the wall switch 20 cancels its wake up timer. The timer wakes the device to check its mailbox in the case where no button push has occurred for a while. The wall switch 20 sends a request for communications to the mail box server on the group monitor. The group monitor returns the contents of the mailbox addressed to the wall switch.

The wall switch 20 processes each request. Examples include a request for health status or a state change request. The wall switch sets it wake up timer and the timer period is directly related to the frequency of system health reporting. The lighting application 427 de-bounces a continual or rapid button depress sequence so as to not create a message storm at the group monitor. If the wall switch 20 doesn't receive the acknowledgment from the group monitor when the global broadcast packet is unicasted to the group monitor, then the switch will generate and issue the group multicast. In this instance, no check message follow up is issued from the wall switch 20. Communication faults and anomalies are tallied by the switch for health status reporting as described previously with reference to luminaire 10.

Group Monitor

The group monitor acknowledges (MAC layer) receipt of the message from the wall switch 20 indicating pushing of the on switch 465. The group monitor extracts the global broadcast packet from the message and creates a multicast message in response using the global broadcast packet as the payload indicating or specifying a lighting control event (e.g., turn on/off or dim a light source) and specifying a lighting control group, for example, using a lighting control group identifier. The global broadcast packet is temporarily saved.

The group monitor transmits the multicast message at least three times, for example. The group monitor sends the global broadcast packet to the applications that share the processor with the group monitor. The group monitor interrogates the global broadcast packet to determine the type of control and the zone.

If a gateway 50 (see FIG. 1A) is present and the type of control is a switch on/off or the zone to make the adjustment to is global, then a gateway notification is created indicating the state of the switch, the group, and the zone. The message is reliably unicast to the gateway 50.

The group monitor uses the group table to look up the set of devices that are members of the zone. The group monitor forms a check message using the saved global broadcast as the payload. The group monitor sends the message (reliable unicast) to each lighting system element in the zone as a check to confirm the receipt of the multicast. Of note, the confirmation check is not made with the wall switch 20 that actually initiated the control event.

The group monitor service accommodates concurrent multiple switch on/off events irrespective of zone. The group monitor service cancels a confirmation check if it receives a state that obsolesces an active state in progress. In this case the group monitor service starts a new confirmation check based on the latest state. If the group monitor misses the unicast message from the switch but gets the multicast issued by the switch—the group monitor executes the gateway and zone check described above.

Recipient Lighting System Elements

Upon receipt of a multicast message from the group monitor at a recipient lighting system element (e.g., luminaire, wall switch, plug load controller, or power pack) that was sent in response to the original message from wall switch 20, the recipient device checks the group indication and the counter. The message is discarded if the recipient device is not a member of the identified lighting control group specified in the message. The message is also discarded if it is a duplicate (multicast switch state change events are transmitted at least three times, for example, by the group monitor). The global broadcast payload is extracted from the multicast message and processed by the lighting application 427 running on the MCU 430. Upon receipt of the confirmation check, the message is acknowledged (MAC).

The recipient lighting system element determines if it has already acted on the event. If not then the global broadcast payload is extracted from the unicast message and processed by the lighting application 427. The applications are responsible for either processing the global broadcast or discarding it as out of zone scope.

For example, upon receipt of the multicast message from the lighting control group monitor at a respective recipient lighting system element, the respective recipient lighting system element checks a lighting control group identifier to determine whether the respective recipient control device is a member of the identified lighting control group in the message. The recipient lighting system element then determines whether the recipient lighting system element has already acted on a lighting control event (turn on/off or dim) for lighting control network operation that is similar or identical to the event in the multicast message. If the recipient lighting system element has not already acted in accordance with the control event for lighting control operation, the recipient lighting system element adjusts one of its own LED light source(s) in accordance with the control event. Alternatively, if the recipient lighting system element has already acted on the lighting control event specified in the multicast message, no further action is taken in response by discarding the multicast message.

FIG. 5 is a block diagram of a plug load controller 30 that communicates via the lighting control system of FIG. 1B. The circuitry, hardware, and software of plug load controller 30 shown is similar to the luminaire 10 of FIG. 3. However, plug load controller 30 is a retrofit device that plugs into existing AC wall outlets, for example, and allows existing wired lighting devices, such as table lamps or floor lamps that plug into a wall outlet, to operate in the lighting control system. The plug load controller 30 instantiates the table lamp or floor lamp by allowing for commissioning and maintenance operations and processes wireless lighting controls in order to the allow the lighting device to operate in the lighting control system.

Plug load controller 30 is similar to luminaire 10 in that they are singularly addressable devices that can be configured to operate as a member of one or more lighting control groups or zones. As shown, plug load controller 30 includes a DC conversion circuit 505 (which may instead be a power supply) driven by a power source 500, in our example, an AC line or mains. Power source 500, however, may be a battery, solar panel, or any other AC or DC source.

DC conversion circuit 505 receives power from the power source 500, and may include a magnetic transformer, electronic transformer, switching converter, rectifier, or any other similar type of circuit to convert an input power signal into a suitable power signal to power itself. Plug load controller 500 further comprises an AC power relay 560 which relays incoming AC power from power source 500 to other devices that may plug into the receptacle of plug load controller 30 thus providing an AC power outlet 570.

Plug load controller 30 furthers include an LED driver circuit 510 and a light emitting diode(s) (LED) 520. LED driver circuit 510 is coupled to LED(s) 520 and drives that LED(s) 520 by regulating the power to LED(s) 520 by providing a constant quantity or power to LED(s) 520 as its electrical properties change with temperature, for example. The LED driver circuit 510 includes a driver circuit that provides power to LED(s) 520 and a pilot LED 517. LED driver circuit 510 may be a constant-voltage driver, constant-current driver, or AC LED driver type circuit that provides dimming through a pulse width modulation circuit and may have many channels for separate control of different LEDs or LED arrays. An example of a commercially available intelligent LED driver circuit 510 is manufactured by EldoLED.

LED driver circuit 510 can further include an AC or DC current source or voltage source, a regulator, an amplifier (such as a linear amplifier or switching amplifier), a buck, boost, or buck/boost converter, or any other similar type of circuit or component. LED driver circuit 510 outputs a variable voltage or current to the LED(s) 520 that may include a DC offset, such that its average value is nonzero, and/or a AC voltage. The pilot LED 417 indicates the state of the plug load controller 30, for example, during the commissioning and maintenance process.

For purposes of communication and control, plug load controller 30 is treated as single addressable device that can be configured to operate as a member of one or more lighting control groups or zones. The plug load controller 30 is line powered and remains operational as long as power is available.

Plug load controller 30 includes power distribution circuitry 525 and a micro-control unit (MCU) 530. As shown, MCU 530 is coupled to LED driver circuit 510 and controls the light source operation of the LED(s) 520. MCU 530 includes a memory 522 (volatile and non-volatile) and a central processing unit (CPU) 523. The memory 522 includes a lighting application 527 (which can be firmware) for both lighting control operations and commissioning/maintenance operations. The power distribution circuitry 525 distributes power and ground voltages to the LED driver circuit 510, MCU 530, and wireless transceivers 545 and 550 to provide reliable operation of the various circuitry on the plug load controller 30 chip.

Plug load controller 30 also includes a dual-band wireless radio communication interface system configured for two way wireless communication. In our example, plug load controller 30 has a radio set that includes radio 545 for sub-GHz communications and another radio 550 for Bluetooth RF communications. A first transceiver 545, such as a 900 MHz wireless transceiver, issues control operations on the lighting control network. This first transceiver 545 is for any-to-many communication, over a first of the two different wireless communication bands, of control and systems operations information, during luminaire operation and during control network operation over the first wireless communication band.

A second transceiver 550, such as a 2.4 GHz BLE (Bluetooth) wireless transceiver carries out commissioning and maintenance of the lighting control network. This second transceiver 550 is for point-to-point communication, over a second of the two different wireless communication bands, of information other than the control and systems operations information, concurrently with at least some communications over the first wireless communication band.

As shown, the MCU 530 includes programming in the memory 522 which configures the CPU (processor) 523 to control operations of the respective plug load controller 30, including the communications over the two different wireless communication bands via the dual-band wireless radio communication interface system 545, 550. The programming in the memory 522 includes a real-time operating system (RTOS) and further includes a lighting application 527 which is firmware/software that engages in communications with the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 over the commissioning network 7 of FIGS. 1A-B. The lighting application 527 programming in the memory 522 carries out lighting control operations over the lighting control network 5 of FIGS. 1A-B. The RTOS supports multiple concurrent processing threads for different simultaneous control or communication operations of the plug load controller 30.

Although not shown, it should be understood that the MCU 530 of plug load controller 30 may be of the three different CPU and memory architectures depicted and described for the luminaire 10 in FIGS. 3A-C and the wall switch 20 in FIGS. 4A-C. As explained earlier, integrating the first transceiver 545 and second transceiver 550, for example, into a dual band SOC chipset of the MCU 530, saves manufacturing costs and conserves power (e.g., line power or battery power).

Plug load controller 30 may include detector(s), such as a daylight sensor, an occupancy sensor, an audio sensor, a temperature sensor, or other environmental sensor (not shown). Detector(s) may be based on Acuity Brands Lighting's commercially available xPoint® Wireless ES7 product. Drive/sense circuitry (not shown), such as application firmware, can drive the occupancy and photo sensor hardware.

FIG. 6 is a block diagram of a power pack 35 that communicates via the lighting control system of FIG. 1B. The circuitry, hardware, and software of power pack 35 shown is similar to the luminaire 10 of FIG. 3. However, power pack 35 is a device that retrofits with existing wired light fixtures (luminaires). The power pack 35 instantiates the wired light fixture by allowing for commissioning and maintenance operations and processes wireless lighting controls in order to allow the lighting device to operate in the lighting control system.

Power pack 35 is similar to luminaire 10 in that they are singularly addressable devices that can be configured to operate as a member of one or more lighting control groups or zones. As shown, power pack 35 includes a DC conversion circuit 605 (which may instead be a power supply) driven by a power source 600, in our example, an AC line or mains. Power source 600, however, may be a battery, solar panel, or any other AC or DC source.

DC conversion circuit 605 receives power from the power source 600, and may include a magnetic transformer, electronic transformer, switching converter, rectifier, or any other similar type of circuit to convert an input power signal into a suitable power signal to power itself. Power pack 35 further comprises an AC power relay 660 which relays incoming AC power from power source 600 to the existing wired luminaire.

Power pack 35 furthers include an LED driver circuit 610. LED driver circuit 610 is coupled to luminaire and drives that luminaire by regulating a driving signal, in our example, a 0-10V dimming signal 620. The LED driver circuit 610 includes a driver circuit that provides power to a pilot LED 617 and a dimming signal to luminaire 620. LED driver circuit 610 may be a constant-voltage driver, constant-current driver, or AC LED driver type circuit that provides dimming through a pulse width modulation circuit and may have many channels for separate control of different LEDs or LED arrays. An example of a commercially available intelligent LED driver circuit 610 is manufactured by EldoLED.

LED driver circuit 610 can further include an AC or DC current source or voltage source, a regulator, an amplifier (such as a linear amplifier or switching amplifier), a buck, boost, or buck/boost converter, or any other similar type of circuit or component. LED driver circuit 610 outputs a variable voltage or current as the dimming signal to luminaire(s) 620 that may include a DC offset, such that its average value is nonzero, and/or a AC voltage. The pilot LED 617 indicates the state of the power pack 35, for example, during the commissioning and maintenance process.

For purposes of communication and control, power pack 35 is treated as single addressable device that can be configured to operate as a member of one or more lighting control groups or zones. The power pack 35 is line powered and remains operational as long as power is available.

Power pack 35 includes power distribution circuitry 625 and a micro-control unit (MCU) 630. As shown, MCU 630 is coupled to LED driver circuit 610 and controls the light source operation of the luminaire via the dimming signal to luminaire 620. MCU 630 includes a memory 622 (volatile and non-volatile) and a central processing unit (CPU) 623. The memory 622 includes a lighting application 627 (which can be firmware) for both lighting control operations and commissioning/maintenance operations. The power distribution circuitry 625 distributes power and ground voltages to the LED driver circuit 610, MCU 630, and wireless transceivers 645 and 650 to provide reliable operation of the various circuitry on the power pack 35 chip.

Power pack 35 also includes a dual-band wireless radio communication interface system configured for two way wireless communication. In our example, power pack 35 has a radio set that includes radio 645 for sub-GHz communications and another radio 650 for Bluetooth RF communications. A first transceiver 645, such as a 900 MHz wireless transceiver, issues control operations on the lighting control network. This first transceiver 645 is for any-to-many communication, over a first of the two different wireless communication bands, of control and systems operations information, during luminaire operation and during control network operation over the first wireless communication band.

A second transceiver 650, such as a 2.4 GHz BLE (Bluetooth) wireless transceiver carries out commissioning and maintenance of the lighting control network. This second transceiver 650 is for point-to-point communication, over a second of the two different wireless communication bands, of information other than the control and systems operations information, concurrently with at least some communications over the first wireless communication band.

As shown, the MCU 630 includes programming in the memory 622 which configures the CPU (processor) 623 to control operations of the respective power pack 35, including the communications over the two different wireless communication bands via the dual-band wireless radio communication interface system 645, 650. The programming in the memory 622 includes a real-time operating system (RTOS) and further includes a lighting application 627 which is firmware/software that engages in communications with the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of mobile device 25 over the commissioning network 7 of FIGS. 1A-B. The lighting application 627 programming in the memory 622 carries out lighting control operations over the lighting control network 5 of FIGS. 1A-B. The RTOS supports multiple concurrent processing threads for different simultaneous control or communication operations of the power pack 35.

Although not shown, it should be understood that the MCU 630 of power pack 35 may be of the three different CPU and memory architectures depicted and described for the luminaire 10 in FIGS. 3A-C and the wall switch 20 in FIGS. 4A-C. As explained earlier, integrating the first transceiver 645 and second transceiver 650, for example, into a dual band SOC chipset of the MCU 630, saves manufacturing costs and conserves power (e.g., line power or battery power).

Power pack 35 may include detector(s), such as a daylight sensor, an occupancy sensor, an audio sensor, a temperature sensor, or other environmental sensor (not shown). Detector(s) may be based on Acuity Brands Lighting's commercially available xPoint® Wireless ES7 product. Drive/sense circuitry (not shown), such as application firmware, can drive the occupancy and photo sensor hardware.

FIG. 7 is a flow chart presenting the states and transitions for the various lighting system elements of FIGS. 1A-B. As shown in FIG. 7, the various lighting system elements (luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35) go through a series of states and transitions during commissioning of the lighting control system, when lighting control operations are executed, and during maintenance.

Beginning in block 700, lighting system elements are not yet powered up or installed. Moving now to block 710, upon power up after installation the lighting system elements behave as autonomous devices. There is no sub-GHz subnetwork to provide collaborative control, however the lighting system elements begin BLE beaconing to identify themselves to a commissioning/maintenance application 22 executing on a mobile device 25.

Upon power up, luminaries 10A-N enter an autonomous control mode that permits the integrated detector(s) (e.g., occupancy, daylight/photo, or audio sensors) to exert limited control (lights on/off, dim up/down) of the light fixture. The control behavior is defined as default settings for the device.

After power up, wall switches 20A-N may turn off their beacons after a predetermined time period (e.g., one hour) after powering up in order to conserve battery life. While in an installed state, the wall switches 20A-N can be induced to restart their beacons by pushing any button offered. For example, the wall switches 20A-N switch off their beacons after a predetermined time period (e.g., one hour) after a button push.

On board pilot LEDs of the luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements visually signal the state of the lighting system element (for all states) as an aid to the system installer and maintainer that is operating the commissioning/maintenance application 22 on the mobile device 25. The pilot LED goes off when the lighting system element is in an installed state.

Continuing now to block 720, the luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements enter a commissioning state from the installed state upon connection to the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25. The luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements receive configuration information via the commissioning/maintenance application 22 and will transition to an operational state upon completing the commissioning process and connecting to the group subnetwork.

The advertising beacon signals a sub-state while the luminaires 10A-N and wall switches 20A-N undergo commissioning. The luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements advertise an un-configured sub-state until completion of MAC-PHY configuration. Afterwards and until operational, the wall switches 20A-N or luminaires 10A-N advertise a waiting-connect (sub-GHz net) sub-state. Each of the luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements is commanded to issue a blink during its commissioning phase, otherwise the LED is off.

Proceeding now to block 730, the luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements participate in collaborative group and zone lighting control while in an operational state. For example, sensors 365 of luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements affect zone behavior by signaling control measures to the lighting elements in the zone's fixtures.

As a security measure all luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements, with the exception of the group monitor, cease BLE beaconing during the operational state. The group monitor changes its advertisement to indicate its role as the group monitor and its state (operational). The pilot LED remains off during the operational state.

Continuing now to block 740, depending on condition, luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements experiencing faults may enter a degraded state where partial capability is available. It may be possible to correct a degraded state through the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25. In this case, the degraded luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements are commanded to switch to the maintenance state, the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25 is connected, a fix is attempted, and the device transitions to either operational state or back to degraded state depending on outcome of fix. Pilot LEDs can issue a bright S-O-S indication of three rapid blinks, three off counts, and three rapid blinks while in degraded state. Upon button push, wall switches issue the same S-O-S type of signal 5 times and then cease activity to conserve battery power.

Moving now to block 750, luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements can be commanded to enter a maintenance state. The command arrives over the lighting control network (sub-GHz network) from the group monitor. The luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements maintain full or degraded operating capability while in the maintenance state. The luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements resume BLE advertising (state=maintenance) seeking connection with commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25. Luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements can then be re-configured via the commissioning/maintenance application 22 of the mobile device 25. The luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, and other lighting system elements transition to an operational (or degraded) state upon command to exit the maintenance state. The pilot LED executes a continuous bright blink when in the maintenance state. Upon button push, wall switches 20A-N issue the same continuous bright blink type of signal 5 times and then cease LED activity to conserve battery power.

FIG. 8 is a high-level functional block diagram of a mobile device 25 for commissioning and maintenance of the lighting control system of FIGS. 1A-B. Shown are elements of a touch screen type of mobile device 25 having the commissioning/maintenance application 22 loaded, although other non-touch type mobile devices can be used in the prior token-based communications under consideration here. Examples of touch screen type mobile devices that may be used include (but are not limited to) a smart phone, a personal digital assistant (PDA), a tablet computer or other portable device. However, the structure and operation of the touch screen type devices 25 is provided by way of example; and the subject technology as described herein is not intended to be limited thereto. For purposes of this discussion, FIG. 8 therefore provides a block diagram illustration of the example of mobile device 25 having a touch screen display for displaying content and receiving user input as (or as part of) the user interface.

The activities that are the focus of discussions here typically involve data communications. As shown in FIG. 8, the mobile device 25 includes a first digital transceiver (XCVR) 809 a, for digital wireless communications via a wide area wireless mobile communication network and second digital XCVR 810 a for digital wireless communications via a Bluetooth network, although the mobile device 25 may include additional digital or analog transceivers (not shown).

The transceiver 810 a (network communication interface) conforms to one or more of the various digital wireless communication standards for Bluetooth communications. As discussed previously, communications through the Bluetooth transceiver 810 a and the commissioning network 7 shown in FIGS. 1A-B relate to protocols and procedures in support of commissioning and maintaining lighting system elements, including luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N, plug load controller 30, and power pack 35. In addition, communications to gateway 50 are also supported. Such communications, for example, may utilize IP packet data transport utilizing the digital wireless transceiver (XCVR) 810 a and over the air communications via commissioning network 7 shown in FIGS. 1A-B. Transceiver 810 a connects through radio frequency (RF) send-and-receive amplifiers (not shown) to an antenna 810 b.

The transceiver 809 a (network communication interface) conforms to one or more of the various digital wireless communication standards utilized by modern mobile networks. Examples of such transceivers include (but are not limited to) transceivers configured to operate in accordance with Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA) and 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) network technologies including, for example and without limitation, 3GPP type 2 (or 3GPP2) and LTE, at times referred to as “4G.” For example, transceiver 809 a provides two-way wireless communication of information including digitized audio signals, still image and/or video signals, web page information for display as well as web related inputs, and various types of mobile message communications to/from the mobile device 25.

In one example, the transceiver 809 a sends and receives a variety of signaling messages in support of various data services provided by a network of a wireless service provider, to user(s) of mobile device 25 via a mobile communication network (not shown). Transceiver 809 a also connects through radio frequency (RF) send-and-receive amplifiers (not shown) to an antenna 809 b.

Many modern mobile device(s) 25 also support wireless local area network communications over WiFi, instead of or in addition to data communications using the wide area mobile communication network. Hence, in the example of FIG. 8, for packet data communications, mobile device 25 may also include a WiFi transceiver 811 a and associated antenna 811 b. Although WiFi is used here as the example, the transceiver 811 a may take the form of any available two-way wireless local area network (WLAN) transceiver of a type that is compatible with one or more standard protocols of communication implemented in wireless local area networks, such as one of the WiFi standards under IEEE 802.11 and/or WiMAX.

The transceiver 811 a, for example, may provide two-way data transport for wireless communication with a wireless access point in a residence or enterprise that the user frequents or with any available hotspot offered in a public venue. A WiFi access point (not shown), communicates with compatible user equipment, such as the mobile device 25, over the air using the applicable WiFi protocol. The WiFi access point provides network connectivity, usually to a wide area network 55 (as shown in FIGS. 1A-B), such as the Internet. In a home or office premises, for example, the WiFi access point would connect directly or via a local area network (LAN) to a line providing internet access service. In a more public venue, an access point configured as a hotspot may offer similar connectivity for customers or others using the venue, on terms and conditions set by the venue operator. Although communicating through a different network or networks, the transceiver 811 a supports various types of data communications similar to the packet data communications supported via the mobile network transceiver 809 a, including communications to and from gateway 50 and the other devices shown in FIGS. 1A-B.

The mobile device 25 further includes a microprocessor, sometimes referred to herein as the host controller 802. A processor 802 is a circuit having elements structured and arranged to perform one or more processing functions, typically various data processing functions. Although discrete logic components could be used, the examples utilize components forming a programmable CPU. A microprocessor 802 for example includes one or more integrated circuit (IC) chips incorporating the electronic elements to perform the functions of the CPU. The processor 802, for example, may be based on any known or available microprocessor architecture, such as a Reduced Instruction Set Computing (RISC) using an ARM architecture, as commonly used today in mobile devices and other portable electronic devices. Of course, other processor circuitry may be used to form the CPU or processor hardware in mobile device 25, other devices and server computers (e.g., gateway 50), network elements, etc.

Returning more specifically to the mobile device 25 example of FIG. 8, the microprocessor 802 serves as a programmable host controller for mobile device 25 by configuring device 25 to perform various operations, for example, in accordance with instructions or programming executable by processor 802. For example, such operations may include various general operations of the mobile device 25, as well as operations related to communications with luminaires 10A-N, wall switches 20A-N and other lighting system elements during commissioning and maintenance performed by the commissioning/maintenance application 22. Although a processor may be configured by use of hardwired logic, typical processors in mobile devices are general processing circuits configured by execution of programming.

The mobile device 25 includes a memory or storage system 804, for storing data and programming. In the example, the memory system 804 may include a flash memory 804 a and a random access memory (RAM) 804 b. The RAM 804 b serves as short term storage for instructions and data being handled by the processor 802, e.g. as a working data processing memory. The flash memory 804 a typically provides longer term storage.

Hence, in the example of mobile device 25, the flash memory 804 a is used to store programming or instructions for execution by the processor 802. Depending on the type of device, the mobile device 25 stores and runs a mobile operating system through which specific applications, including commissioning/maintenance application 22 (which may be a web browser executing a dynamic web page) or a native application, run on the mobile device 25. Examples of mobile operating systems include Google Android, Apple iOS (I-Phone or iPad devices), Windows Mobile, Amazon Fire OS, RIM BlackBerry operating system, or the like. Flash memory 804 a may also be used to store mobile configuration settings for different mobile applications or services executable at device 25 using processor 802.

Of course, other storage devices or configurations may be added to or substituted for those in the example. Such other storage devices may be implemented using any type of storage medium having computer or processor readable instructions or programming stored therein and may include, for example, any or all of the tangible memory of the computers, processors or the like, or associated modules.

The instructions or programming may be used to implement any other device functions associated with communications for commissioning and maintenance on mobile device 25. Program aspects of the technology may be thought of as “products” or “articles of manufacture” typically in the form of executable code or process instructions and/or associated data that is stored on or embodied in a type of machine or processor readable medium (e.g., transitory or non-transitory), such as one of the memories 804 a, 804 b of memory system 804, or a memory of a computer used to download or otherwise install such programming into the mobile device, or a transportable storage device or a communications medium for carrying program for installation in the mobile device 25.

In the example, the flash memory 804 a stores applications for execution by the microprocessor-based host controller 802, typically through operation/execution of the device operating system. Of note, for purposes of the present discussion, the flash memory 804 stores a commissioning/maintenance application 22 as one of the programs for execution by the microprocessor 802. Execution of commissioning/maintenance application 22 by the microprocessor 802 configures mobile device 25 to perform a variety of functions, particularly to commission and maintain the lighting system elements over the commissioning network 7. In the example, commissioning/maintenance application 22 also engages in communications with the gateway 50.

In the illustrated example, the mobile device 25 includes a secure component 800. The secure component 800 (e.g. a secure element or “SE”) may be provisioned as a section within the memory 804 or may take the form of a universal integrated circuit card (UICC) located within the device 25. A common example of a UICC implementation of the SE 800 is a subscriber identity module (SIM). As discussed above, the SE provides secure storage for various identifiers associated with mobile device 25. The SE typically has a unique identifier and is provisioned for operation of the mobile device 25 by storage of a mobile directory number (MDN) and/or mobile identification number (MIN) assigned to the device 25 by the carrier network operator.

The secure component contains applications that use secure keys running inside the secure processor. Although similar to other applications, the applications for the secure processor are sometimes smaller and sometimes referred to as applets 843. In an example, commissioning/maintenance application 22 may be an applet residing in the SE 800. For example, there may be at least one applet 842 to engage in communications.

The mobile device 25 may include a variety of different types of physical user interface elements to interact with the commissioning/maintenance application 22. For discussion purposes, in the mobile device 25 shown in FIG. 8, the physical user interface elements of device 20 includes a touch screen display 820 (also referred to herein as “touch screen 820” or “display 820”) to support gestures. For output purposes, the touch screen 820 includes a display screen, such as a liquid crystal display (LCD) or the like. For input purposes, touch screen display 820 includes a plurality of touch sensors 822.

A keypad may be implemented in hardware as a physical keyboard of mobile device 25, and keys may correspond to hardware keys of such a keyboard. Alternatively, some or all of the keys 830 (and keyboard) of device 25 may be implemented as “soft keys” of a virtual keyboard graphically represented in an appropriate arrangement via touch screen display 820. The soft keys presented on the touch screen display 820 may allow the user of device 25 to invoke the same user interface functions as with the physical hardware keys for authentication purposes.

In general, touch screen display 820 and touch sensors 822 (and one or more keys 630, if included) are used to provide a textual and graphical user interface for the mobile device 25. In an example, touch screen display 820 provides viewable content to the user at device 25. Touch screen display 820 also enables the user to interact directly with the viewable content provided in the content display area, typically by touching the surface of the screen with a finger or an implement such as a stylus.

As shown in FIG. 8, the mobile device 25 also includes a sense circuit 828 coupled to touch sensors 822 for detecting the occurrence and relative location/position of each touch with respect to a content display area of touch screen display 820. In this example, sense circuit 828 is configured to provide processor 802 with touch-position information based on user input received via touch sensors 822. In some implementations, processor 802 is configured to correlate the touch position information to specific content being displayed within the content display area on touch screen display 820. The touch-position information captured by the sense circuit 828 and provided to processor 802 may include, but is not limited to, coordinates identifying the location of each detected touch with respect to the display area of touch screen display 820 and a timestamp corresponding to each detected touch position. Accordingly, the processor 802 may determine input of a phone number, a token, or menu identifiers selected during audible scripts, for example.

FIG. 9A is a wireless advertising packet format for commissioning a lighting system element on a lighting control network via a commissioning network. The wireless advertising packet 900 includes a one byte preamble 905, four byte access address 910, an 8-39 byte advertising/data channel protocol data unit (PDU) or payload 915, and a three byte cyclic redundancy check (CRC) 920. The advertisement packet 900 is sent in the clear by the lighting system element with no encryption as it carries no sensitive information. The wireless lighting control system determines the optimum advertising interval, which can be dynamically adjusted or a predetermined time interval (e.g., fixed or static time period). A scan request by a mobile device 25, for example, results in a scan response with a payload identical to that of the advertisement

FIG. 9B is an exploded view of an advertising channel PDU 915 of the advertising packet of FIG. 9A. As shown, the advertising channel PDU 915 includes a two byte header 925 and a 6-37 byte payload 930.

FIG. 9C is an exploded view of a header 925 of the advertising channel PDU 915 of FIG. 9B. The header 925 of the advertising channel PDU 915 includes the following fields: a four bit PDU type 935, a two bit reserved for future use (RFU) 940, a one bit TxAdd 945, a one bit RxAdd 950, a 6 bit length 955, and a 2 bit RFU 960. The PDU type 935 indicates the advertising channel type, for example, ADV_IND (0000), ADV_DIRECT_IND (0001), ADV_NONCONN_IND, (0010), SCAN_REQ (0011), SCAN_RSP (0100), CONNECT_REQ (0101), and ADV_SCAN_IND (0110). Two payload types (SCAN_REQ and SCAN_RESP) will result in a scan request or response. The other four PDU types are advertising channel types The TxAdd 945 and RxAdd 950 fields indicate whether the advertiser or initiator are public, respectively. Length 955 indicates length of the payload 930 in bytes.

FIG. 9D is an exploded view of a payload 930 of the advertising channel PDU 915 of FIG. 9B. As shown advertising channel PDU 930 includes an ADV address 965 field. ADV address is the public or random device address of an advertising lighting system element. Lighting system element specific data goes into each of the AD [0 . . . N] index fields 970, 975, and 980.

FIG. 9E is an exploded view of an advertising index 970 of the payload 930 of FIG. 9D. As shown the advertising index 970 includes an AD length 985, an AD type 990, and an AD data 995 field.

Each of the advertising indices [0 . . . N] 970, 975, 980 are used to carry command-response schemes. However, some command-response messages can be too large to fit in the maximum payload portion of the payload transmission unit (20 bytes), therefore message fragmentation and re-assembly capability may be used for such command-response messages.

Some of the commands embedded in the advertising indices [0 . . . N] 970, 975, 980 include identification of a lighting system element (e.g., to blink or cease blinking), RF channel discovery (e.g., general request for channel discovery, progress indication, and actual RF channel selection), tuning RF power (tune RF power or progress indication), setting the lighting control network configuration (e.g., short MAC address), and setting the lighting control network address table (including defining lighting control group behavior).

It will be understood that the terms and expressions used herein have the ordinary meaning as is accorded to such terms and expressions with respect to their corresponding respective areas of inquiry and study except where specific meanings have otherwise been set forth herein. Relational terms such as first and second and the like may be used solely to distinguish one entity or action from another without necessarily requiring or implying any actual such relationship or order between such entities or actions. The terms “comprises,” “comprising,” “includes,” “including,” or any other variation thereof, are intended to cover a non-exclusive inclusion, such that a process, method, article, or apparatus that comprises a list of elements does not include only those elements but may include other elements not expressly listed or inherent to such process, method, article, or apparatus. An element preceded by “a” or “an” does not, without further constraints, preclude the existence of additional identical elements in the process, method, article, or apparatus that comprises the element.

Unless otherwise stated, any and all measurements, values, ratings, positions, magnitudes, sizes, and other specifications that are set forth in this specification, including in the claims that follow, are approximate, not exact. They are intended to have a reasonable range that is consistent with the functions to which they relate and with what is customary in the art to which they pertain.

While the foregoing has described what are considered to be the best mode and/or other examples, it is understood that various modifications may be made therein and that the subject matter disclosed herein may be implemented in various forms and examples, and that they may be applied in numerous applications, only some of which have been described herein. It is intended by the following claims to claim any and all modifications and variations that fall within the true scope of the present concepts. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method comprising: establishing a commissioning connection with each of a plurality of lighting system elements; building a lighting control group network table listing an entry for each of the lighting system elements as members of a lighting control group, the lighting control group network table including an entry for each of the plurality of lighting system elements; based on communication with each lighting system element via an established commissioning connection, selecting one of the lighting system elements as a lighting control group monitor; and sending the lighting control group network table to the lighting control group monitor to establish the lighting control group arranged to communicate over a wireless lighting control network.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein selecting the lighting control group monitor comprises: for each of the plurality of lighting system elements, determining a location of the respective lighting system element; identifying, based on the determined locations, one lighting system element as being a most centrally located lighting system element relative to all of the determined locations; and selecting the identified one lighting system element as the lighting control group monitor.
 3. The method of claim 2, wherein establishing the commissioning connection with each of the lighting system elements further comprises: deriving a respective location of each lighting system element based on a location of the mobile device during the respective establishment of the commissioning network connection; and determining the location of the respective lighting system element is based on the respective derived location.
 4. The method of claim 2, wherein selecting the lighting control group monitor further comprises: identifying, based on the determined locations, another lighting system element as being a next most centrally located lighting system element relative to all of the determined locations; and selecting the identified other identified lighting system element as a backup lighting control group monitor.
 5. The method of claim 4, wherein selecting the lighting control group monitor further comprises: repeatedly, for the remaining plurality of lighting system elements, identifying a subsequent lighting system element as being another next most centrally located lighting system element relative to all of the determined locations such that the plurality of lighting system elements is ordered from most centrally located to least centrally located; and selecting, based on the order, each of the remaining plurality of lighting system elements as a correspondingly further subsequent backup lighting control group monitor.
 6. The method of claim 1, wherein establishing the commissioning network connection with each of the lighting system elements further comprises: deriving a respective location of each lighting system element based on a location of the mobile device during the respective established commissioning network connection; and determining the location of the respective lighting system element is based on the respective derived location.
 7. The method of claim 1, further comprising: upon selecting the lighting control group monitor, modifying the entry for one selected system element in the lighting control group network table to indicate that the one selected system element is the lighting control group monitor.
 8. The method of claim 1, further comprising: upon selecting the lighting control group monitor, selecting another of the lighting system elements as a backup lighting control group monitor, the backup lighting control group monitor being selected based on a location of the backup lighting control group monitor relative to the other lighting system elements; repeatedly selecting, based on a location relative to the other lighting system elements, a subsequent lighting system element as a subsequent backup lighting control group monitor such that, except for the lighting control group monitor, each lighting system element is selected as a subsequent backup to one other lighting system element; and modifying the lighting control group network table such that each entry indicates the corresponding lighting system element is either the lighting control group monitor, the backup lighting control group monitor or one of the subsequent backup lighting control group monitors.
 9. The method of claim 8, further comprising: for each of the plurality of lighting system elements, determining a location of the respective lighting system element; identifying, based on the determined locations, a lighting system element as being most centrally located relative to all of the determined locations; identifying, based on the determined locations, another lighting system element as being a next most centrally located relative to all of the determined locations; repeatedly identifying, based on the determined locations, a subsequent lighting system element as being a subsequently next most centrally located relative to all of the determined locations; selecting the lighting control group monitor comprises selecting the one determined lighting system element as the lighting control group monitor; selecting the backup lighting control group monitor comprises selecting the other identified lighting system element as the backup lighting control group monitor; and repeatedly selecting the subsequent backup lighting control group monitor comprises selecting each subsequently identified lighting system element as the next subsequent backup lighting control group monitor.
 10. The method of claim 9, wherein: establishing the commissioning network connection with each of the other lighting system elements further comprises deriving a respective location of each of the other lighting system element based on a location of the mobile device during the respective established commissioning network connection; and determining the location of the respective other lighting system element is based on the respective derived location.
 11. The method of claim 1, wherein the wireless commissioning network is a 2 gigahertz or higher radio band and the wireless lighting control network is a sub-gigahertz radio band.
 12. A first lighting system element comprising: a dual-band wireless radio communication interface system configured for two way wireless communication for: any-to-many communication, over a wireless lighting control network communication band, of operations information, over the lighting control network communication band; and point-to-point communication, over a wireless commissioning network communication band, of information other than the operations information, concurrently with at least some communications over the lighting control network communication band; a processor; a memory accessible to the processor; and programming in the memory which configures the processor to: establish a commissioning connection with a mobile device; receive a lighting control group network table listing an entry for each of a plurality of other lighting system elements and the first lightning system element as members of a lighting control group; after receiving the lighting control group network table, terminate the commissioning connection between the first lighting system element and the mobile device; select a lighting control group monitor based on a location of the lighting control group monitor relative to the other lighting system elements that are members of the lighting control group; store the lighting control group network table in the memory of the first lighting system element; and send the lighting control group network table to each lighting system element of the lighting control group.
 13. The first lighting system element of claim 12, wherein the programming in the memory further configures the processor to: for each of the plurality of other lighting system elements, determine a location of the respective other lighting system elements; identify, based on the determined locations, one lighting system element as being most centrally located relative to all of the determined locations; and select the one identified lighting system element as the lighting control group monitor.
 14. The first lighting system element of claim 13, wherein the programming in the memory configures the processor to determine each respective location by obtaining the respective location, each respective location derived from a respective location of the mobile device during an established commissioning connection with the respective other lighting system element.
 15. The first lighting system element of claim 13, wherein the programming in the memory further configures the processor to: identifying, based on the determined locations, another lighting system element of the plurality of other lighting system elements as being a next most centrally located lighting system element relative to all of the determined locations; and selecting the another identified lighting system element as a backup lighting control group monitor.
 16. The first lighting system element of claim 15, wherein the programming in the memory configures the processor to: repeatedly, for the remaining plurality of other lighting system elements, identify a subsequent lighting system element of the plurality of other lighting system elements as being the next most centrally located relative to all of the determined locations such that the plurality of other lighting system elements is ordered from the next most centrally located to least centrally located; and select, based on the order, each of the remaining plurality of other lighting system elements as a correspondingly further subsequent backup lighting control group monitor.
 17. The first lighting system element of claim 12, wherein the programming in the memory further configures the processor to modify, upon selection of the lighting control group monitor, the lighting control group network table such that the entry for the lighting control group monitor is a first entry in the lighting control group network table.
 18. The first lighting system element of claim 12, wherein the programming in the memory further configures the processor to: after terminating the established commissioning connection between the first lighting system element and the mobile device via the commissioning communication band, continue to communicate via the commissioning communication band with the mobile device.
 19. A non-transitory computer readable medium comprising a memory embodying programming instructions, wherein execution of the programming instructions by a processor configures the processor to perform functions, including functions to: establish a commissioning connection with each of a plurality of lighting system elements; build a lighting control group network table listing an entry for each of the lighting system elements as members of a lighting control group, the lighting control group network table including an entry for each of the plurality of lighting system elements; based on communication with each lighting system element via an established commissioning connection, select one of the lighting system elements as a lighting control group monitor based on relative locations of the lighting system elements; and send the lighting control group network table to the lighting control group monitor to establish the lighting control group.
 20. A method comprising: receiving from each of a plurality of lighting system elements, an advertisement packet; building a lighting control group network table listing an entry for each of the lighting system elements as a member of a lighting control group; selecting one of the lighting system elements as a lighting control group monitor based on a location relative locations of the lighting system elements; and sending the lighting control group network table to the lighting control group monitor to establish the lighting control group. 